The Long Walk North
The Portolá Expedition and their Journey Through California, 1769
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They walked a thousand miles to find a harbor that didn't exist. They found San Francisco Bay instead. They didn't want it.
In 1769, a Spanish expedition of sixty-four men left San Diego under orders to locate the harbor of Monterey. Their engineer, Miguel Costansó, kept a diary of measurements: distances, latitudes, the depth of every pool, the height of a dead grizzly bear. He did not record feelings. He recorded facts.
The facts are these: the men walked for six months through canyons and mountains and fog. They ate their mules when the food ran out. Seventeen soldiers were crippled by scurvy. They held two votes — both unanimous, pointing in opposite directions. They passed the harbor they were looking for without recognizing it. They stumbled onto the largest natural harbor on the Pacific Coast while hunting deer. They turned around and walked home.
But the diary records something else — something Costansó measured without understanding its weight.
At every village, for five hundred miles, the native peoples of the California coast came out to meet them. The Kumeyaay brought seeds. The Tongva offered to share their land. The Chumash brought fish enough to feed the entire column, then danced until the Spaniards begged them to stop. The generosity was so consistent, so relentless, that it reads less like hospitality and more like a civilization's policy.
Within a generation, everything the diary described was gone. The missions came. The dances were suppressed. The canoes were abandoned. The engineer's diary became both a tribute to a world of extraordinary abundance and the blueprint for its destruction.
The Long Walk North follows Costansó's diary entry by entry, with nothing invented and nothing added, to tell a story about the distance between measurement and meaning — and about a coast that is still feeding strangers, still crossing the water, still here.
For readers of Hampton Sides, S.C. Gwynne, Evan S. Connell, and John McPhee.